Let’s Start Talking Book Pet Peeves

I was born with a rare and often fatal heart condition called Tetralogy of Fallot. No, don’t feel sorry for me, I’m 48 and still on this side of the lawn. Luckily for me, I was a teen when corrective surgery reduced the chances of death. I’m only telling you this in order to explain my passion for books. You see, when I was a child playtime was restricted. The doctors felt the less I exerted myself, the better. This was way before video games, so really, the only choice I had was to sit quietly and read. And read I did!

Books became my ticket to the outside. They allowed me to “explore” the world and learn about people different from myself. In my young mind I would take the place of a character in order to do things I could never do myself. Reading became more than a habit, books became my friends.

I read so much and so often that by the time I was in the 6th grade, my test scores indicated my reading level to be that of an adult. My teacher told my mom I should start getting my books from the local library because the school’s kid’s library did not have anything that would hold my interest. This was before teen fiction was allowed in school libraries, to be honest, the only “teen” fiction at that time was Judy Blume and even that was too childish for my taste.

After corrective surgery I continued to read. As a teen I read indiscriminately; whatever book my mom brought in the house I would read, even a Danielle Steele (okay, I only read one of hers. One was enough). I read all the popular authors of the 70’s and 80’s, Hollywood biographies, horror and the classics. Some were good some were bad (Stephen King good, Danielle Steele oh, so bad).

All of authors I read had something in common. They came from big publishing houses and had editors who helped with the writing process. The editor would be the first to read a book, be it a rough draft or finished copy. It was the editor who spotted errors, inconsistencies, terrible sentence structure, wooden dialog, glaring omissions or scenes that just didn’t quite cut it. Now, with the move to self-publishing and small publishing houses, editors are becoming a dying breed. To many writers this is a blessing, as they often have a love/ hate relationship with an editor, but for the reader, this is becoming a real problem. Which gets me to the purpose of this post. As a reader I would like to offer some advice to today’s writers, and would like your input as well. Let’s start talking about our pet peeves when it comes to books. Besides bad grammar (that’s a given) what makes you put a book down or least decide not to read another by the same author? I have a list, but for the sake of brevity (I think I just heard one of my literary professors choke. Sari, brief?) I’ll start with a biggie, Lying.

In his book On Writing, Stephen Kings says his biggest piece of advice to new writers is to never lie. This may sound odd, coming from a fiction writer, but what he meant was be true to your story and characters. Don’t have a character do something, well, out of character. Start with the truth of your character’s personality and stick to it. Remember, we readers become intimate with your characters and if we are confronted by a change of personality we are abruptly stopped by this action and start doubting you and the character. Once doubt sets in, it is awfully hard for us to trust you. Once distrust sets in, you’ve lost us. One of the beautiful things about King’s own writing is his ability to take an ordinary person and place him or her in an unusual circumstance, while staying true to who he or she is. Would we have loved The Stand as much as we did if Stu Redmond, the hero of the story, turned into a coward or did something horrible in the middle of the book? I think not.

Any fan of fantasy or sci fi will tell you the best books of these genres are those that are based in some truth. Good sci fi writers stick to actual physics or at least make it sound like they are. They make the impossible seem possible because they don’t lie. They make take us to distance planets, but they don’t do it in hot air balloons

I said I would make it brief, so I’ll stop here. In my next post we will talk about inconsistencies, as this is the showstopper for many of my reading friends. Now it’s your turn, tell me about your pet peeve when it comes to reading.

A Course! A Course! My Kingdom for a Course! I learn Shakespeare and I have something in common; we both have been underestimated

Back in the 90’s, my ex-husband and I were in a position to build our dream home. The kind you build to live in forever (we made it five years). Since this was my dream house I had a library built next to the living room.  I did not know it at the time, but the room was more of a salon, less than a private library. It included two walls of  built in bookshelves, a sitting for six comfortably and a piano for entertainment. I spent many a long afternoon talking to friends about history, religion and current issues in the library/salon.

At the time I was in my early thirties and “uneducated”. I had a long held dream of finishing college but motherhood and lack of self esteem kept from trying.  This did not mean I was not well read or ignorant of good literature. My library was filled with nonfiction books as well as the classics. I read anything and everything that I felt would broaden my understanding of the world around me.  I could  hold a conversation with even the most educated of our community. I was lucky enough to call the late Dr. Mark Lappe my friend.

Along with the heart break of divorce I had to decide what to do with the hundreds of books I had collected and shelved in my library. I was moving out of state and the cost of moving all my treasured books was more than I could afford. What was a bibliophile to do? I decided to have a moving sale.  The books were a big draw; we lived in small coastal town without a book store.

I will never forget the look on a retired professor’s face when she walked into my library to see if I had a book or two that might interest her. She turned and looked at me in utter bewilderment. “You’ve read all of these? If I had known, we could have been friends“.   Yes, this is what she said to me! She assumed, because I did not have a degree behind my name I was not worthy. She assumed I was not worth talking to or that we would have nothing in common because I did not have a college degree. What a thing to assume!

I thought of this story the other night as I read D,L. Johanyak’s Shakespeare’s World. In it he says the major reason why the critics of Shakespeare do not believe he is the author of the plays that bear his name is because he was uneducated; that he did have a college education. How could someone, who did not attend higher education, come up with all the words, terms and ideas that we attribute to William Shakespeare?

What kind of world did Shakespeare live in that would allow an uneducated man to write what and how he did?

Like me, William Shakespeare was probably well read and was friends with those who were educated and well traveled.  Johanyak tells us that by 1500 there were over 35,000 printed books in circulation. There were books on Western and Classical history, science,  biographies and travel books. The list of history books at Shakespeare’s disposal alone could be enough to have had an impact onhis history plays.

The Elizabethan English holidays included many pagan rituals, including Midsummer Eve. This holiday is the backdrop to A Midsummer’s night dream.  Even Christian holidays had in their core, pagan practices. It would not take much of an imagination or college education to use social rituals and traditions in play writing.

Renaissance music was becoming more and more complicated; this was the beginning of the Baroque period. The music Shakespeare heard could have been a catalyst for his of rhyming style. Or perhaps the many poets who still traveled as entertainers inspired him.

There were advancements in science and medicine. William Harvey had discovered blood circulation. He wrote Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals. In 1543 Copernicus  wrote On the Revolutions of the Celestial Sphere. Shakespeare grew up knowing the earth was not the center of the universe. Mental illness, which shows up a lot in Shakespeare’s plays was starting to be taken serious as a disease, even if this disease was thought to originate in the liver.

Just because Shakespeare did not attend college does not mean he was to ignorant to write about the world around him. I resent the idea that a country bred man would have been to ill informed to invent new words and turn the world of theater upside down.

The world of Shakespeare, like our world today was a one in which anyone who wanted to, who had the time, could become self educated. The Renaissance was the beginning of the modern world, with new thoughts and ideas spreading as fast as trade and disease.  The dreaded plague, or Black Death hit London early in Shakespeare’s career. It shut the theaters down for a while which could have given him the time to read and learn about his world. We will never know just where Shakespeare got his ideas or what his muse was. What we do know is, that, thanks to the invention of the printing press he had the world at his feet.  We cannot assume a lot about Shakespeare, but we can assume he was smart and well read. For all we know, he too had a library in his small London home.

Next up, the various mediums I have used to learn more about the Bard.

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